Snowflake

Snowflake is a cloud-based database and is currently offered as a pay-as-you-go service in the Amazon cloud. It is developed by Snowflake Computing. Snowflake adopts a shared-nothing architecture. It uses Amazon S3 for its underlying data storage. It performs query execution within in elastic clusters of virtual machines, called virtual warehouse. The Cloud Service layer stores the collection of services that manage computation clusters, queries, transactions, and all the metadata like database catalogs, access control information and ect. in a key-value store (FoundationDB).

History

Implementation of Snowflake began in late 2012 and has been generally available since June 2015.

Concurrency Control

Multi-version Concurrency Control (MVCC)

Snowflake supports MVCC. As Snowflake's underlying data storage is done by Amazon S3, each write operation instead of performing writes in place, it creates a new entire file including the changes. The stale version of data is replaced by the newly created file, but is not deleted immediately. Snowflake allows users to define how long the stale version will be kept in S3, which is up to 90 days. Based on MVCC, Snowflake also supports time travel query.

Indexes

Not Supported

Snowflake does not support index, as maintaining index is expensive due to its architecture. Snowflake uses min-max based pruning, and other techniques to accelerate data access.

Isolation Levels

Snapshot Isolation

According to their paper and talk, Snowflake supports Snapshot Isolation. However, according to their documentation, it is said that Read Committed is the only Isolation level that is supported.

Stored Procedures

Not Supported

Storage Model

Hybrid

Snowflake horizontally partitions data into large immutable files which are equivalent to blocks or pages in a traditional database system. Within each file, the values of each attribute or column are grouped together and heav- ily compressed, a well-known scheme called PAX or hybrid columnar. Each table file has a header which, among other metadata, contains the offsets of each column within the file.

Storage Architecture

Disk-oriented

Snowflake's data storage is done via Amazon S3 service. Upon query execution, the responsible work nodes uses HTTP -based interface to read/write data. The worker node also uses its local disk as a cache.

Foreign Keys

Supported

Snowflake supports defining and maintaining constraints, but does not enforce them, except for NOT NULL constraints, which are always enforced including foreign key constraint.

Query Compilation

Not Supported

System Architecture

Shared-Nothing

It uses Amazon S3 for its underlying data storage. It performs query execution within in elastic clusters of virtual machines, called virtual warehouse. Upon query execution, virtual warehouse use HTTP-based interface to read/write data from S3. The Cloud Service layer stores the collection of services that manage computation clusters, queries, transactions, and all the metadata like database catalogs, access control information and ect. in a key-value store.

Query Execution

Vectorized Model

Snowflake processes data in pipelined fashion, in batches of a few thousand rows in columnar format. It also uses a push instead of pull model as the relational operators push the intermediate results to their downstream operators.

Snowflake Logo
Website

https://www.snowflake.net/

Tech Docs

https://docs.snowflake.net/manuals/index.html

Developer

Snowflake Computing

Country of Origin

US

Start Year

2013

Project Type

Commercial

Written in

C++, Java

Derived From

FoundationDB

Operating Systems

Hosted

Licenses

Proprietary

Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowflake_Computing